Darwin Quintero scored twice in added time on Thursday to give Santos Laguna of Mexico an extraordinary 5-4 aggregate win over the Montreal Impact and a place in the semifinals of the CONCACAF Champions League.

Bear Grylls was skeptical when the Discovery Channel asked him to host an adventure show with a simple concept: Drop him in a remote location armed with only a knife, a water bottle and a flint, and let him find his way back to civilization. "I said, 'What if it all goes wrong? I'm not very good at making everything look neat and tidy,' " says Grylls, 33, a survival specialist who served three years in the British special forces. "They said, 'Just do it and let us film what happens.' "

Though Jozy Altidore, a 6-1, 175-pound striker for the New York Red Bulls, is barely 17, he is under a lot of pressure to produce goals in his second professional season when Major League Soccer opens April 7. John Wolyniec is the only other healthy Red Bulls striker with significant experience, so Altidore knows he'll have to take on more responsibility.

When Rod Laver completed the Grand Slam at the U.S. Open in 1969, he did what was standard practice in those days: He jumped over the net to shake hands with opponent Tony Roche. On-court celebrations are de rigueur in today's game, so many players, past and present, remain baffled as to why net hopping has gone the way of wooden rackets.

Former U.S. national captain Claudio Reyna signed a contract with the New York Red Bulls on Wednesday. The signing reunited the midfielder with Bruce Arena, his former coach at the University of Virginia and the U.S. national team. The deal came one day after the English Premier League's Manchester City terminated Reyna's contract, clearing the way for the 33-year-old to return home to join Major League Soccer.

Henry Juszkiewicz and his Harvard Business School classmate Dave Berryman bought Gibson Guitar in 1985, when it was near collapse. As CEO, Juszkiewicz turned around Gibson, and now he's determined to transform it into a broader kind of a company.

In his second novel, the author of Bodega Dreams follows a part-time arsonist in Spanish Harlem. Julio Santana is an entrepreneur, a self-made man who has found his way out of the projects and into a better life. But a closer look at the protagonist in Ernesto Quionez's second novel, Chango's Fire, reveals a man whose heart and soul lack spark and spirit.